Title: searchDomino.com - Today's News: Headlines and advice for Domino/Notes professionals
A newsletter published by TechTarget 
 December 03, 2003 >> Receive this e-mail as text   >> About this e-mail 
ISSUE SPONSORED BY:
>>  MK Net.Work: ZipMail - Transparent ZIP Compression for Lotus Notes
>>  SHARE: SHARE's Lotus Application User Training Comes to Long Beach this February
 Today's Highlights  

>>  LEAD STORY:  Analysts question IBM's $7 billion on-demand claims
>>  NEWS:  Lotus announces finalists in awards program
>>  DECEMBER TIPS CONTEST:  Win Motorola T5720 two-way radios
>>  THE MISSING LINK:  An ATM card under your skin
 News and Top Stories  

LEAD STORY
Analysts question IBM's $7 billion on-demand claims  (iSeries Network)
IBM CEO Sam Palmisano's claims that his company has raked in $7 billion in orders for on-demand computing services in the past year. While few doubt the future success of Big Blue's initiative, some experts question IBM's math.
More on this topic:
What are your thoughts on the on-demand initiative? Sound off in our forum.
Article: IBM to push on-demand computing in 2003
SPONSORED BY: MK NET.WORK - ZIPMAIL

Lotus Notes Budgets cuts? You can save between $1 to $10 per week and per Lotus Notes user. With $1 saved per week and per Notes user:
You have 1,000 users: $1 x 52 x 1,000 = $52,000 saved per year
10,000 users: $1 x 52 x 10,000 = $520,000 saved per year
100,000 users: $1 x 52 x 100,000 = $5,200,000 saved per year

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NEWS
Lotus announces finalists in awards program (e-Pro Magazine)
The finalists in several categories for the Lotus Awards, formerly called the Beacon Awards, are now public. Winners will be named later this month.

NEWS
Gordano cracks down on spam (eWEEK)
Web-based messaging software provider Gordano is now giving end users the option of turning on Bayesian filtering capabilities and has expanded content filtering options for administrators.

DAILY HEADLINES
All headlines, including those below, are available from our news page.
  > Could spam spell the end of e-mail?
 VIEW ALL NEWS AND TOP STORIES

 Announcements & Links  


DECEMBER TIPS CONTEST
Win Motorola T5720 two-way radios
This must-have set of two rechargeable Ni/Cd battery-powered Motorola TalkAbout radios with accessories has a five-mile range, 22 channels, 38 privacy codes, 10 audible call tones, talk-confirmation tone, audible low-battery alert and battery meter, as well as optional voice activation. To win these crazy cool gadgets, submit your best tip today!

SPONSORED BY: SHARE

SHARE's Lotus Application User Training Comes to Long Beach this February

Join hundreds of other IBM enterprise-class Lotus computing professionals in Long Beach for the most comprehensive user-run technical product training available. This multi-discipline mega training event will feature 700+ hours of technical education, on-site seminars, hands-on labs, an 80 vendor product/service expo, and countless professional networking opportunities.

Register today for greatest savings!


TAKE OUR MEMBER POLL
Messaging headaches
Which messaging headache plagues your company the most?

SEARCHDOMINO.COM LEARNING GUIDE
Spam
It's a beast. It's a scourge. It's preventing optimal productivity. It's spam. How big of a problem is unwanted e-mail industry-wide? What can you do to limit its entrance into your systems? What are the best weapons on the market for the fight? We've researched spam extensively and have found many links to help answer these questions. And although good spam may seem like an oxymoron, there is a bright side to the issue. Check out this Learning Guide for info about spam, spammers and spamming.


THE MISSING LINK
An ATM card under your skin

When Frank Sinatra sang about having "you under my skin," it's a good bet that he wasn't talking technology. But a company based in Florida has created an RFID tag that can be surgically implanted in your arm. After you get "chipped," all you have to do is hold up your arm where you might otherwise swipe your credit or debit card. Critics say the RFID implant poses a unique problem. "When your bank card is compromised, all you have to do is make a call to the issuer. In this case, you have to make a call to a surgeon," said one privacy advocate.



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